Example sentences of "are [verb] [adv] for a [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Does the television studio , in which a group of academics are gathered together for a discussion on an ‘ academic ’ issue , count as an academic setting ? |
2 | Banks are competing fiercely for a share of the slower-growing market . |
3 | Cheddars may be hard or semi-hard ; they are pressed lightly for a matter of hours and then more firmly for a short period of days . |
4 | Some of the finest acrobats in the world are limbering up for a show in the Big Top in Cheltenham . |
5 | ‘ We are pressing hard for a meeting between BAe 's finance director and our lead investor as we are aware that time is slipping by , ’ said Mr Hooke . |
6 | ‘ At the most , they are confined only for a century or two . |
7 | Work is well on , but they are looking particularly for an Aldis gun sight for the project . |
8 | This is partly to get higher wages , but it is really so because jobs are run-of-the-mill and they are looking simply for a change of venue , a new setting , and new faces . |
9 | Often the local press are looking more for a photo opportunity than a story . |
10 | If you are turned down for a grant or loan or you are unhappy with the amount given , there is no right of appeal to an independent tribunal as there used to be . |
11 | These Accounts are drawn up for a period of 52 weeks ended on 27th March 1993 and the comparative figures stated are in respect of a period of 52 weeks ended on 28th March 1992 . |
12 | As we have seen , he argues that trade union government will be relatively centralised where agreements are drawn up for an industry or an entire country , and will be relatively decentralised where they are regionally- or plant-based . |
13 | we a we are going , we are going out for a meal on Saturday night i er , in , with or without , we 're going out , I 've er we want to go to the when we went with . |
14 | The move will be seen as a further step towards a possible post-election deal between Labour and the Liberal Democrats , who are holding out for a commitment to PR for the Commons as a pre-condition of backing a minority government . |
15 | Following on from this there should be no difficulty in categorising transactions where gift tokens or coupons are exchanged wholly for a product as transactions under the SGSA 1982 ( compare Davies v Customs and Excise Commissioners [ 1975 ] 1 WLR 204 ) . |
16 | FERRARI the fast fading Grand Prix giants , are revving up for a revival … with British know-how . |
17 | The forces of Chaos are driven back for a time and a fragile peace descends on Ulthuan . |
18 | They have the highest income-tax and VAT rates , the harshest drinking laws , the dreariest bars , the dullest restaurants and television that makes you feel as if you are warming up for a coma . |
19 | Revised proposals are expected from the Commission later this year , before they are put back for a second reading at the European Parliament . |
20 | SUSAN DEVOY , seven times champion and top seed , and Sue Wright , the English girl who ended the New Zealander 's run last year , are lined up for a revenge meeting in the quarter-finals of the Hi-Tec British Open Championships . |
21 | At Highlander , workshops of this sort of cultural exchange play a critical role in reaching across the natural human barriers which we can expect to find when a number of different people from widely different communities , cultural backgrounds , and economic and social circumstances are thrown together for a weekend to discuss their common problems in an attempt to find solutions . |
22 | Similarly , children who are gifted perhaps in dance are taken out for a master class and so on . |
23 | I understand that all the counterfoils and voting slips cast are kept securely for a period after an election until they are eventually destroyed . |